Johannes P. Osterhoff is the German artist behind "Dear Jeff Bezos." The project, deemed an "interface performance piece" by its creator, involves sending automated emails directly to Bezos in order to keep the Amazon CEO entirely up-to-date on Osterhoff's latest Kindle reads.

The performance is offered up as a snarky rebuke to what Osterhoff sees as the intrusiveness of Amazon's Whispersync system. The Whispersynce cloud storage system allows the online retailer to track Kindle user data whenever somebody places a bookmark. Osterhoff told Rhizome.org that he configured Whispersync to automatically email his Kindle information directly to Bezos everytime he drops a bookmark in place.

"Not so long ago it was very simple to read a book in private. With the Kindle and Whispersync it is impossible. I am required to surrender my privacy during reading on my Kindle. So sending e-mails about my reading activity directly to the CEO of Amazon was just the next logical step."

"Companies like Amazon are interested in exclusive ownership of data, because with this exclusivity comes its value. As a user of such services, one loses not only control but also authorship of the data one generated. To make the data I generate public, is to devalue it. This is why I prefer to share data in an open format."

But like any piece of performance art, it's unclear what the real-world impact is intended to be. Not surprisingly, Jeff Bezos did not return The Daily Dot's request for comment via the email address posted by Osterhoff. Perhaps he's not a fan of unsolicited emails these days.